Thursday, September 27, 2012

Trident submarine missiles review to suggest 'stepping down nuclear ladder'


HMS Astute, first of the class of nuclear hunter killer submarine built at Barrow in Furness
HMS Astute, first of the class of nuclear hunter killer submarine built at Barrow in Furness, which could carry a cheaper alternative to Trident. Photograph: Andy Buchanan/AFP/Getty Images
The government's review of the future of the Trident submarine nuclear missile system is likely to suggest a significant downgrading of the UK's nuclear deterrent, including the possibility of locking the warheads "in a cupboard" for delayed launch only after several weeks of mounting international tension.
The revelation was made by Sir Nick Harvey, the Liberal Democrat who was the defence minister leading the review until the government reshuffle this month. The MP for North Devon said he believed the policy could get support in Whitehall and from senior military figures and Labour.
Harvey said past policy on Trident had been dictated by the 1980s view that the only deterrent to a nuclear attack from the then Soviet Union was the belief that the UK could "flatten Moscow" in retaliation. This led to the UK building Trident and having at least one armed submarine at sea every hour of every day since.

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